Looking for a very good quality brand hdmi. Its for my sammy pn59d550, blue ray, & cable box. I've used the cheap brand. And pic quality is garbage. Which brand would You recommend? I've gone to best buy and they choose audio quest over monster. Anyone using audio quest brand cables?

If you are getting an image with those "cheap" cables, you won't see much of an improvement spending 10 times as much with the name brand cables. $5 cables are just as good as those $50 cables. Monoprice and blue jeans cables are excellent.

There is a huge difference in pic quality for blue ray and playstation 3. My friends have the same tv as I do. They all have moster hdmi cables, And there pic quality is gorgeous compared to mine. Just to make sure. I switched mines over to there tv and blue ray. And its almost as if the cable can't handle it. I just don't want to spend over $100 like they did. But I still want a good quality cable.

Do you have the exact same settings as your friend's tv? Is his calibrated? I have one expensive cable (belkin) and 3 cheap mono price cables. Can not tell any difference on my Pioneer. All produce an excellent picture.

Do you have the exact same settings as your friend's tv? Is his calibrated? I have one expensive cable (belkin) and 3 cheap mono price cables. Can not tell any difference on my Pioneer. All produce an excellent picture.

It's not calibrated. i used the same setting as mine. The one that is a dead give away is when I'm on netflix. The top left corner, the pic quality keeps changing from low standard quality to medium. It never goes to full high def. That's when I started to question the hdmi cable.

It's not calibrated. i used the same setting as mine. The one that is a dead give away is when I'm on netflix. The top left corner, the pic quality keeps changing from low standard quality to medium. It never goes to full high def. That's when I started to question the hdmi cable.

That may be related to your internet connection. Netflix automatically streams based on your connection. If it doesn't maintain a 6 Mbs download speed, it will drop out of HD.

It's not calibrated. i used the same setting as mine. The one that is a dead give away is when I'm on netflix. The top left corner, the pic quality keeps changing from low standard quality to medium. It never goes to full high def. That's when I started to question the hdmi cable.

I am well aware. Having 16mbps is fast enough for me. I am sure. My friends have even faster speed, due to there home business.

What device are you streaming Netflix through? Roku? Apple TV? Boxee? Wifi directly into tv? You will find out in a hurry, those devices are poor when it comes to actual streaming and how fast the download speeds are. Unless directly in sight of your wifi router, that 16 Mbs is probably not the actual speed that is making it to those devices or tv, unless directly wired via ethernet.

The mono price HDMI cable i ended up getting wasn't compatible with 1080p...i realised this once i hooked this up to my PS3. and I'm pretty sure it mentioned that it supported FULL HD during the time as well.

It's not calibrated. i used the same setting as mine. The one that is a dead give away is when I'm on netflix. The top left corner, the pic quality keeps changing from low standard quality to medium. It never goes to full high def. That's when I started to question the hdmi cable.

you should realize that there is no way that the hdmi cable can affect your download speeds... it can't, as there's no causal relationship between the two...

if you'd like to educate yourself a bit (and see why what others are telling you is correct), here's some reading for you...

which model hdmi from monoprice did you have? I just ordered, premium 24awg high speed certified.

I can't find my invoice as it was purchased a few years back but it was their best quality 25 foot cable. I also had a 3 foot of their best cable also go bad. I have bought an incredible amount of mono price audio and video cables and I never had an issue except with the hdmi cables.

I can't find my invoice as it was purchased a few years back but it was their best quality 25 foot cable. I also had a 3 foot of their best cable also go bad. I have bought an incredible amount of mono price audio and video cables and I never had an issue except with the hdmi cables.

Did you ever contact them for replacement? Most of their cables carry lifetime warranty and they usually just ship you the replacement cable free of charge provided you're a regular and not like a habitual returner or "my cables are bad" caller. I've purchased several HDMI cables (at least 3-4) from them in the past and never had one go bad. I don't have any experience with their hdmi > 10', but if you had both go bad I would actually worry that there's something wrong with your a/v chain that's frying them and they're eating it rather than passing it on through to the hdmi controller.

There is a huge difference in pic quality for blue ray and playstation 3. My friends have the same tv as I do. They all have moster hdmi cables, And there pic quality is gorgeous compared to mine. Just to make sure. I switched mines over to there tv and blue ray. And its almost as if the cable can't handle it. I just don't want to spend over $100 like they did. But I still want a good quality cable.

Where did you guys come from? It feels like Groundhog Day when I see a thread of this title.

First, if you are trying to make a point, your credibility goes way up if you properly spell blu-ray. It's amazing how many "experts" can't even spell the name "Blu-Ray".

Secondly the HDMI cable simply passes 1s and 0s. It is not a smart device that can change the 1s and 0s to make the picture better. How would it do that?

Finally, the HDMI specs are owned by the HDMI Org. They own the specs, they own the trademarks, they own the patents, they own HDMI. You can find their explanation of the two types of HDMI cables at:

And, yes, there are only two types of HDMI cables - standard speed and high speed. At short distances both will work with 1080p/60 and 3D. At longer distances the standard speed cables *may* only work with 720/1080i.

And has been pointed out many times already, the HDMI cable does not change your download speed. It simply takes audio video signals and sends them to your TV/receiver. It does not decode the internet video stream.

And, finally, if you want to go waste your money on higher cost HDMI cables that do the exact same thing as the lower cost cables, you go right ahead and do that. It's your money and you may waste it anyway you see fit. I'd rather have a more expensive component that makes a difference. But, that's just me. I also think there are a few people out in this forum who, in the past, said that you could mail them the money instead.

And, yes, there are only two types of HDMI cables - standard speed and high speed. At short distances both will work with 1080p/60 and 3D. At longer distances the standard speed cables *may* only work with 720/1080i.

And has been pointed out many times already, the HDMI cable does not change your download speed. It simply takes audio video signals and sends them to your TV/receiver. It does not decode the internet video stream.

And, finally, if you want to go waste your money on higher cost HDMI cables that do the exact same thing as the lower cost cables, you go right ahead and do that. It's your money and you may waste it anyway you see fit. I'd rather have a more expensive component that makes a difference. But, that's just me. I also think there are a few people out in this forum who, in the past, said that you could mail them the money instead.

+1

Ian

The best way to succeed in life is to act on the advice you give to others

"Let's cut to the chase:
CNET strongly recommends cheap HDMI cables widely available from online retailers instead of the expensive counterparts sold in your local electronics store.

Expensive cables aren't worth it
If you walk into your typical electronics store to buy an HDMI cable, you're likely to see prices upward of $50 with promises of better performance and faster speeds. Do you really need to spend that much money on a single HDMI cable?

Absolutely not--those cables are a rip-off. You should never pay more than $10 for a standard six-foot HDMI cable. And despite what salesmen and manufacturers might tell you, there's no meaningful difference between the $10 cable and the $50 cable."

Did you ever contact them for replacement? Most of their cables carry lifetime warranty and they usually just ship you the replacement cable free of charge provided you're a regular and not like a habitual returner or "my cables are bad" caller. I've purchased several HDMI cables (at least 3-4) from them in the past and never had one go bad. I don't have any experience with their hdmi > 10', but if you had both go bad I would actually worry that there's something wrong with your a/v chain that's frying them and they're eating it rather than passing it on through to the hdmi controller.

I did not since I figured that the expense and time of shipping a cable back would not be worth it. I've spent hundreds of dollars with them and I have never had a warranty claim. Thanks for the info.

Where did you guys come from? It feels like Groundhog Day when I see a thread of this title.

What you should probably do is save your response as a text file so you can just copy and paste it about once a month when you see the thread title without having to read it I commend you on your patience.

What you should probably do is save your response as a text file so you can just copy and paste it about once a month when you see the thread title without having to read it I commend you on your patience.

Secondly the HDMI cable simply passes 1s and 0s. It is not a smart device that can change the 1s and 0s to make the picture better. How would it do that?

I have never opened up a cable but assume it is simply made of copper strands so how does an HDMI cable pass 1's and 0's if not through an electrical charge? If it is an electrical charge, (probably low voltage, low current with short bursts of varying voltage) why would that not be subject to the same reductions of voltage due to the resistance over the length of the cable and potentially poor slew rates as any other electrical charge passing down a copper strand? I thought both issues would result in some form of algorithmic error correction by the receiving device that could very well result in reduced picture or sound quality (perhaps data sent in packets with a header specifying number of bits in the packet and a check digit?). That would be consistent with the testing process in the link provided that determines if the cable meets type 1 or type 2 standards. I would guess that this is not a case of the cable either passing the test signal or it doesn't, rather the data loss over the length of the cable due to the issues mentioned above result in an unacceptable error rate by the receiving device sufficient to meet the type 1 or 2 designation. Hence a cable of 3ft may pass type 1 and 2 whereas a 20ft cable of the same design may only pass type 1. Happy to be edumacated on this.